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A Very Unimportant Officer

A Very Unimportant Officer Synopsis

Rediscovered after 80 years gathering dust on a family bookshelf and first brought to public attention on BBC Radio 4's Today Programme, A VERY UNIMPORTANT OFFICER is a detailed and intimate account of the experience of Captain Stewart, an ordinary officer in the front line in France and Flanders throughout 1916 and 1917. Recruited to The Cameronians (Scottish Rifles) in 1915 at the age of 33, Captain Stewart went 'over the top' many times, outliving 'so many better men', as he says with typical humility. Through his vivid testimony we learn of the mud ('more like thick slime'), the flies and the difficulties of suffering dysentry while on horseback. In one memorable passage he describes engaging the enemy while smoking a pipe - an episode for which he was awarded the Military Cross. Yet through the chaos and horror of the trenches, Captain Stewart reflects with compassion on the fears and immense courage of the men under his command. Newly edited by his grandson, Cameron Stewart, A VERY UNIMPORTANT OFFICER gives us a fascinating insight into the horrors and absurdities of trench life.

A Very Unimportant Officer Press Reviews

His trench diaries show a different aspect of World War I from the usual images of industrial massacre. * Time Out * A vivid account of an infantry officer's war on the Western Front . . . should be required reading for those who really want to understand the war. * Richard Holmes, author of Tommy: The British Soldier on the Western Front * something unusual and fresh on the subject of the Great War . . . edited sympathetically and unobtrusively by his grandson. * The Times * The immediacy, candour and sheer literary merit of his journals make this an important new source for the Great War . . . a very remarkable man. * Evening Standard *